#the one where akutagawa is petulant and throws fits at dazai when changing patterns gets hard
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the argument of my post is that he did not. abuse implies maltreatment and intentional harm, taking advantage of a relationship to extert control and force, etc. i am suggesting that they have a mutual understanding and that this is an effort they are undertaking together; we do not see those negotiations or conversations, but we see very little of their relationship except for glimpses, and I am asserting that those glimpses of respect, understanding, and affection elucidate the details of the rest. none of this is to say it isn't violent. but they exist in violence, and akutagawa communicates in violence.
I am not holding them to the standard of behavior, communication, and pedagogy applicable outside of the context of genre fiction, and then I am further operating within their circumstances, personalities, environment, and narrative arcs.
thus, in impact, intent, and the characters' perceptions, I am suggesting that dazai did not abuse akutagawa, and that, rather, their dynamic, while not without tension, is not one of cyclical trauma, but of saving oneself through the other.
the crux of my argument and the framework i used to explore this analysis is that when you cut away presumption and artifice, the effect and details of their interactions don't align with abuse. and that when you shift to that lens, there emerges another story, one which, for me, untangled knots that had formed when I'd attempted to understand them through my assumptions of who they should be rather than who they are.
pm!dazai didn't abuse akutagawa. he reacted proportionately to the threat akutagawa posed to himself.
when dazai smacks akutagawa around in canon, they're running drills. dazai is not hitting him in misdirected anger or because he is venting his own suffering on him. akutagawa does not instinctually protect himself. in his fits of hyperviolence, he seeks to kill and be killed, and nearly is in beast, and in the course of his initial pursuit of atsushi.
he does not have the reflex or will or instinct to defend himself, and he is slow because he is having to consciously process the effort. his automatic reflex is to attack, but that will not stop him from being shot or overwhelmed or blindsided.
what they are doing in those scenes, what dazai is uniquely able to practice with him since rashomon can't pierce him, is not unlike cognitive behavioral therapy interventions. akutagawa is wired such that when he is triggered, he develops tunnel vision, pressing forward relentlessly without registering danger or responding to negative stimuli. this is a pattern developed from when he deemed dearh inevitable, and one which is liable to get him killed regardless of whether he has a reason to live.
he needs to consciously retrain his instinctual response, and he has to consciously and consistently reinforce it against his existing, much quicker instinct. he has to do it before he has the conviction or will to do it. and he has to do it over and over again, even when it isn't immediately life or death, because the instinct is self reinforcing, and the pattern he is trying to supplant it with is not yet.
skills are part of their users' framework for responding to their environment. jun'ichiro is anxious, but he can hide within light snow. kunikida has his notebook, but it has rigid limitations that he adapts to, similarly to how he works within the limitations of reality to keep from becoming consumed by his ideals.
akutagawa's skill, meanwhile, is wildly fucking disproportionate to akutagawa's constitution which is a problem when akutagawa wont react defensively. akutagawa is canonically frail, chronically ill, thin, and short (he's 5'8", but asagiri insists he's itty bitty every time he describes him in prose). rashomon, meanwhile, is monstrously powerful and hungry. it lends a false sense of untouchable violence when akutagawa himself is weak, and also is just really difficult to focus and control such that using it brings akutagawa into coughing fits. rashomon is also terrifying even in visage; it invites others to react with violence proportionate to their terror against the spectre of rashomon — but akutagawa is small, sick, and human; what is proportionate to rashomon is IMMENSE overkill if aimed at akutagawa. which is especially egregious because akutagawa will let them.
in other words, when dazai meets akutagawa, rashomon is as dangerous to its user as to anyone else. skills should not get their users killed. dazai is right. it's a shit skill.
akutagawa is vulnerable and self-destructive, and he and dazai are working to rewire his instinctual evaluation of his stakes. even when dazai punches akutagawa after akutagawa kills the mimic soldier, it's not a random act of violence or unregulated anger. the mimic soldier was not going to lead them to gide, there was no reality where they restrained him before he bit his cyanide, and he'd attacked dazai. but instead of reacting defensively at the opportunity, akutagawa fell to the former instinct, leaving himself wide open.
dazai reacts how he does because:
they are supplanting an ingrained instinct that is self reinforcing, the correction needs to be consistent to change the pattern and the former instinct needs to be discouraged with the same severity as the threat it poses;
by punching akutagawa first, dazai gave him notice and time to consciously muster the defense reaction theyre working on;
akutagawa needs to build an association between the defensive reaction and the triggering stimulus for this to work;
the context in which this happens is the exact sort of threat that rashomon is then ill equipped to handle— gide can see into the future, like oda, and mimic are military trained gunmen.
when dazai tells akutagawa that he couldn't ever defeat oda, he's not taunting him, he's right. akutagawa is relying on swift killing blows, but against someone who can see into the future, akutagawa is as vulnerable as a baby. and then, shortly after, that's what happens: gide wrecks his shit and is about to murder him dead when oda swoops in to grab dazai's dumb horrible baby kouhai who's trying to kill himself with the ambitious gusto of a horse.
as long as akutagawa fails to seek self-preservation, he is remarkably vulnerable. he's weak, and he's going to get himself killed. dazai doesn't coddle him about it for the same reason fukuzawa slaps ranpo for scampering into a police car with a murderer. you dont get praise for self endangerment.
dazai is not going to affirm a version of akutagawa that is trying to kill the boy dazai promised to save.
***
(also, this explains why akutagawa hates taking baths and being without his coat. dazai tried to instill in akutagawa the vigilance to register danger. in his absence, akutagawa strove to be worthy of demanding his approval by diligently practicing. but he's dazai's dumb baby kouhai who. takes things too far lmao.)
#bsd#bungou stray dogs#bsd akutagawa#it's not just a title but also why would i say something i didnt mean to frame my entire premise#for the record i am a big fan of complex abuse narratives in which all of the contradictions therein are represented#as that is my lived reality#but both of these narratives can coexist here and i think theyre layered so that they both can exist#in the alternative#and muddled in between#but also i think it is consistent with this story#that there are layers in each of its narratives#which permeate into the source material#but this is a layer that i think exists#the one where they are sparring in those moments#the one where akutagawa is petulant and throws fits at dazai when changing patterns gets hard#and the one where dazai and akutagawa are so much like each other that they communicate less in words and more in withering glares#over how embarassing and violating it is when someone understands you that well#btw i love when akutagawa glares at dazai#he's done it a few times#and it's WITHERING#anyway the fandom does this knee jerk thing where they decide something that is a core part of a character is deeply unhealthy#and not the right way to live#like the people who think kunikida's ideals and rigidity are unhealthy or burdensome#but the story's entire thesis is that there is no right way to live#and that you find what works for you and you chase it#and the fact that akutagawa tried to do something similar with kyouka#and then IMMEDIATELY backed off when he realized he'd gone too far and the degree to which it wasnt helping#and that she found something that was#doesnt speak cyclical abuse to me#it speaks “this worked for him for a long time even if now he's ready for something else with atsushi”
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